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Advocates calling on City of Regina to adopt encampment strategy

Advocates calling on City of Regina to adopt encampment strategy

CTV Newsa day ago
Advocates calling on City of Regina to adopt encampment strategy
WATCH: A group of advocates are calling on the City of Regina to adopt an encampment strategy ahead of council at the end of the month.
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Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal
Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal

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Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal

Minister of International Trade Maninder Sidhu speaks to journalists as he arrives for a meeting of the federal cabinet in West Block on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang BRASILIA/MONTEVIDEO — Brazil is engaged in a 'constructive dialog' with Canada to resume negotiations for a free trade agreement between South America's Mercosur bloc and Ottawa, the Brazilian Foreign Trade Secretary said. Canadian officials are due to visit Brazil in late August, according to Tatiana Prazeres, Brazil's Foreign Trade Secretary, who shared details of the visit in a written response to Reuters this week. Canada signaled renewed interest in restarting talks with Mercosur last month, as part of a broader push to diversify trade away from the United States amid uncertainty caused by tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump. Sources from both Canada and Brazil told Reuters that Canada's International Trade Minister, Maninder Sidhu, is expected to travel to Brasilia on Aug. 25. Mercosur, which includes Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, with Bolivia in the process of becoming a full member, is a major exporter of beef, soybeans and minerals. Sidhu's visit 'will be an opportunity to assess the conditions for a possible relaunching of negotiations,' Prazeres said, although no formal date has been set to restart them, she added. Talks have been stalled since 2021 as South American countries focussed on local issues such as elections, before Trump's radical policy shifts reset the trade agenda. Two senior diplomatic sources said formal negotiations could resume in late September or early October. Bilateral trade between the U.S. and Canada totaled US$727 billion last year while Canada's trade with Brazil - the biggest Mercosur economy - reached $9.1 billion, with Brazil posting a $3.5 billion surplus. One source monitoring developments said both sides view the Mercosur-Canada agreement as relatively obstacle-free and expect negotiations to take about a year. Prazeres said any formal restart of negotiations, including setting a timetable for talks, would depend on internal coordination within Mercosur. 'Mercosur is willing to evaluate the next steps,' she said. Uruguay's Foreign Ministry told Reuters that 'no new steps' had been taken regarding Mercosur-Canada talks, but confirmed the agreement remains on the bloc's agenda. Argentina's Foreign Ministry declined to comment. (Reporting by Lisandra Paraguassu in Brasilia, Lucinda Elliott in Montevideo. Additional reporting by Maximilian Heath in Buenos Aires. Editing by Alexander Villegas and Toby Chopra)

Ottawa, province, city to buy Canadian, single-source Toronto subway contract: TTC
Ottawa, province, city to buy Canadian, single-source Toronto subway contract: TTC

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time38 minutes ago

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Ottawa, province, city to buy Canadian, single-source Toronto subway contract: TTC

A Toronto Transit Commission sign is shown at a downtown Toronto subway stop Tuesday, Jan. 31, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graeme Roy TORONTO — The Toronto Transit Commission says all three levels of government have agreed to single-source a subway contract in an effort to support Canadian jobs. The transit agency says the decision to pursue the contract for Line 2 subway trains from Alstom Transport Canada comes in the face of U.S. tariffs and economic uncertainty. The TTC says the base procurement is 70 new train sets in total, including 55 that will be jointly funded by the federal, provincial and municipal governments. It says the current competitive process for the trains has been cancelled and all bidders have been notified. Part of Alstom's requirements for building the trains will be to 'maximize Canadian content.' The announcement comes after the province previously called for a single-source deal for the new fleet. In June, provincial transport minister Prabmeet Sarkaria penned a letter to his federal counterpart Chrystia Freeland requesting that Ottawa consider sole-source procurement of the trains. The TTC says negotiations for the contract are expected to take place over the next few months. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 15, 2025.

Public servants in Brampton must return to the office full time in January, mayor says
Public servants in Brampton must return to the office full time in January, mayor says

CTV News

timean hour ago

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Public servants in Brampton must return to the office full time in January, mayor says

Mayor Patrick Brown looks on during the Diwali Mela festival at Sesquicentennial Park in Brampton, Ont., Friday, Nov. 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Lahodynskyj The mayor of Brampton says he plans to follow the province's lead and force public servants in his municipality to return to the office full-time in 2026. Speaking to Newstalk 1010 on Friday, Mayor Patrick Brown said the city's public servants who are not currently working in the office five days a week will be required to do so starting in January. 'This is a legacy of an accommodation which was brought in during COVID and as much as there are some benefits, you don't get the same level of productivity,' he said. 'The challenge was no one wanted to be the first mover on bringing this policy back out of fear that you may lose staff.' The decision comes one day after the provincial government announced that all members of the Ontario Public Service will be back in office full-time come January. Workers had previously been mandated to work from the office for a minimum of three days per week. Premier Doug Ford said Thursday that about half of all public servants are already working in-office full time. Employees with hybrid work arrangements will need to increase their in-person attendance to four days a week starting on Oct. 20, before remote work comes to an end in January, the province said. Brown called the decision 'long overdue.' 'The fact that the province is doing this is great. It will set the tone. I think it is going to have a cascading with other public servants,' he said. With files from CTV News Toronto's Phil Tsekouras

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